I'm Happy Hermeus Let Me Upload This
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- Опубліковано 18 тра 2024
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Credits:
Producer/Writer/Narrator: Brian McManus
Head of Production: Mike Ridolfi
Editor: Viki Lewis
Editor: Grace Prorok
Animator: Eli Prenten
Animator: Stijn Orlans
Sound and Production Coordinator: Graham Haerther
Sound: Donovan Bullen
Thumbnail: Simon Buckmaster
Head of Moral: Shia LeWoof
Select imagery/video supplied by Getty Images
Thank you to AP Archive for access to their archival footage.
Music by Epidemic Sound: epidemicsound.com/creator
Thank you to my patreon supporters: Abdullah Alotaibi, Adam Flohr, Henning Basma, Hank Green, William Leu, Tristan Edwards, Ian Dundore, John & Becki Johnston. Nevin Spoljaric, Jason Clark, Thomas Barth, Johnny MacDonald, Stephen Foland, Alfred Holzheu, Abdulrahman Abdulaziz Binghaith, Brent Higgins, Dexter Appleberry, Alex Pavek, Marko Hirsch, Mikkel Johansen, Hibiyi Mori. Viktor Józsa, Ron Hochsprung - Наука та технологія
just wanna point out shoutout to whoever decided the place you did the interview its a really nice background
Hermeus do all their podcasts there
@@RealEngineeringARE YOU TELLING ME THEY DO PODCASTS???? Holy shit
@@Lauti-cw2zs they probably figured that multi million views are gonna help with getting up the stocks or other forms of investors, also it makes them seem knowledgeable&reputable to anyone that watches it, while still not leaking secrets out
but still cool that its public and informative to see
@@RealEngineering
Hey how about ARTIFICIAL GRAVITY 🎉 😁
I'm a regular ol sky-walker😂🎉 yay for me
ua-cam.com/users/shortsaw2Zjrv6zkw?si=DA2IPe0O_CNWZn1p
punctuation
Props to Hermeus for allowing the publication.
? He didn't say anything that ANY aero engineer does not already know coming out of school
Props to Hermeus
Not just the aerodynamics, also information that could impact the company itself. Saying trans-pacific flights are unlikely at first, could impact investment.@@w8stral
This is true.
Source: I am en Engineering School
Why would they not want this published? How is this an accomplishment?
33:33 If anyone ever used the Darkstar from “Top Gun: Maverick” in Microsoft Flight Simulator 2020, that’s the exact climb path it asks you to perform in order to get to Mach 10. When i saw that graph i was blown away
yah, but good luck sticking that landing.
@@FlyWithFitz81just have hire tom cruse to fly it 😂
when he explained the diving to get through or avoid the "bad" regions, i immediately thought of the Darkstar flightprofile! Makes so much sense now omg
@@soleenzo893 KSP is a great tool to try this out with
This man is amazing. Not only does he answer the question, he goes on a multi minute indept explanation
That's it! I was wondering the whole time why the interview felt so captivating - it's because the interviewed actually answered the question he was asked!
Tells you everything you need to know about how much we've gotten used to long-winded responses that honestly don't tell you squat.
That's not indept....
These are the guys who deserve to be recognized over Steve Jobs or Elon Musk for examples. They do the real work, and know the stuff which makes everything functional.
@@saturnianrings3920 I guess you know that Elon is the chief engineer at spacex, but I do think the other engineer should get more recognition
@@EduardoVidal2008 no I didn’t know that. Impressive
That whiteboard session encouraged me to actually stick at my education, I DO want to be an aerospace engineer after all, holy shit
Stick with it, you've got this!
really worth it
You got this bro! It’s going to be so worth it at the end.
If you fail, you can always move to Iran and work there. You should have enough knowledge to make it big😂
If you fail, you can always move to Iran and work there. You should have enough knowledge to make it big😂
Damn, the lecture at the end finally explained why I have to dive during the TopGun Darkstar mission in Flight Simulator.
Beat me to it!
The whiteboard transition was iconic, love how everyone was hesitant, curious, than excited in a span of a few seconds. "Everyone" also includes the cameraman and us viewers ofc.
I realize it would be a departure for your regular format, but I'd love to see a video on your Top 10 favorite engineering feats from the 1700s & 1800s. The industrial revolution had some brilliant minds and breakthroughs in material science. Go back even further if you want. Renaissance. Rome. "History's Greatest Hits"
I'd watch it.
I absolutely love to see this man discuss quaterhorse. You can tell he's very passionate about his project
I’m a mech eng who has done some CFD work in the past. So happy I was able to follow everything he was saying. I’m sure it was just barely surface level understanding but it’s always cool to understand complex work being done in a completely different field just using physics as a language translator
your aviation playlist has a binging with babish video in it
So?
@@RealEngineering No harm, no foul.
The insane engineering of the french toast.@@RealEngineering
Bro said so? 😂😂
If you add a video to a playlist youtube will automatically add the next video you try to playlist to that specific list. Ive had to remove R.E's videos fron my music list before
For future reference, the original title was "I'm surprised Hermeus let me upload this honestly"
@@truegrit1860 welll.... it worked for ya`s? lol
@@truegrit1860What I dont get is why the clickbait bothers you so much. What's so wrong with a UA-camr marketing themselves using thumbnail and title trends? That's all a UA-camr has to attract someone to their video.
Why is it clickbait? It’s pretty surprising. Only thing is it’s surprising they shared this rather than let it be published
I'm going to school for robotic automation and I'm really glad you posted the first video about hermeus. It seems like an awesome company I am going to work towards getting a job at when I graduate.
Nice
This is amazing content and I am surprised as well. Its great to see private companies getting hyper-sonic engineering. We need a few canadian companies doing this as well.
This is thinly veiled begging for VC.
@@silverXnoisedon't you have anything better to do than going through all the comments spewing hate and discontent? Get a life, he posted all the info you are talking about in the last video. Nothing is being hidden, no one is being deceptive. You are just trying to be a rabble rouser.
@@silverXnoisewhat's VC
@@MrWhite2222He's probably part of the 10 cent army and affraid of the US getting more hypersonic tech.
There’s actually a promising fusion company startup in Canada called General Fusion. I wish they did more interviews and outreach like this!
Aerospace engineering student here, would definitely love to work in an innovative place like Hermes
Then the recruitment company that presenter runs is just for you!
Keep on grinding!!
@@nameredacted1242 just a shame that all of the job listings are mid or senior level lol, need a grad scheme or junior posiiton first before youcan get considered or trusted for somewhere like hermes
And water is wet my man?
man i hope i can work with brilliant people like them one day
well it's like my old grandad used to say, "you're not gonna find them in the local hoor house, Son."
Unless you have a 4.0 GPA at a top 2 or 3 aerospace school then forget about it.
@@CockatooDudeI'm sure they care more about what someone has to offer their company than how well they happened to do on their school quiz.
@@brodies2494 Trust me, they do not.
@@SMacCuUladh my grandpa used to say "i love you"
cool to see you focusing on the up an coming along with the past and present with great detail, insight and easy to understand videos
keep the good work up , I always will be looking forward to your next video .
11:18 I am genuinely amazed by the sheer amount of detail exposed here. I remain in humble acknowledgement of the mentioned hurdles, as I fully agree with them. Wow! Such level of honesty. Respect!
Nice job! Thanks for posting.
Amazingly open interview. Just brilliant
Great interview, and really cool insights. Thanks to both for taking the time.
Awesome interview. As someone who works in CFD and often provides support to these types of companies, I could tell this guy has a really good understanding of all the different aspects of work involved.
This is by far the best aviation videos I've ever seen
That was awesome!!! Thank you for getting permission to share this with us
You can tell the amount of hard work this guy does by the eye protection glasses’ sunburn mark on his face
This guy's awesome. I'm a mech eng student and that white board session was great. You can tell he loves to teach/talk about technical engineering details, and i do too!
Fascinating stuff. Thanks for posting this.
I just love how he explains that CFD and wind tunnels and ground tests simply can't replace real flight tests. This is an incredible touch with reality that is rare these days with engineers. 😎🤘
That was a fantastic experience. I was riveted the entire interview! Clear, concise, interesting. Can't beat it!
I wish they could have discussed power source vibration frequency and amplitude issues in both low/high-speed conditions on the airframe during flight and issues it could have on the expansion/compression of the airframe. That might have taken the conversation too deep, but I brought it up because if it is not considered during development over the lifecycle of an aircraft, it can compound structural costs to repair with no way to fix the issue.
It's definitely a consideration, their engineers are smart enough to know it, but it'd probably extend this interview to an hour... I'd definitely watch this if it was even three hours long, though.
It's under consideration! I'm less familiar with the interactions of thermal and vibe environments. Do you have further reference?
@@BenCrews I tried to reply with references, but as they were links to external sites, I couldn't. So, I sent you a LinkedIn message with the info.
Wow, what an interview. Very informative. Wish the best to the company!
man this is crazy! it's not normal to let youtubers upload this much of information about the companies engineering and r&d, at 28:18, that part got me excited, i just quckiley got my notpad and started noting downall the things that he was saying, joe is really serious about the engineering and techinical explanation of the aircarft, you can see it while he pulled out the white board and when he was talking about other aircarfts !! , this is the kind of interviews that are not only entertaining to watch but also you can learn stuff from them!! hatts of to hermeus!
This has got to be one of the best videos I have watched recently.
Thank you!!!
"quick write that down" -China
china already knows all this, they've demonstrated hypersonic glide vehicles, thats why we're able to see it. really for the sake of public knowledge we should want china to keep up. like videos about rocket engines always gloss over the injectors because ITAR, but everybody around the world already knows how to build liquid rockets anyway, so it's kinda silly to have that be controlled.
Thanks for bringing us right up to the edge of todays engineering technology and knowledge!
I’ve been watching this channel so long I absolutely love it and this is great news that they’re letting you look this information out
Amazing video, good for them to allow you to show it, they have really smart people there
It was a joy to listen to this very knowledgeable sir. Thank you both for sharing!
As someone with flight dynamics background and interest, this interview was like music to my ears
Hermeus is looking for an experienced Flight Dynamicist! You can work directly for Joe!
Hermeus is following the SpaceX route where young or even experience engineers will look at this and apply to the company
imagine sitting there listening to this conversation, wild! Great upload!
I couldn't understand what he was talking about until he bust out a graph, and I went "ohhhh yeah that makes sense"
This man is brilliant ,you can tell within a few minutes. hoping for their success.
This long form conversation going deep into the aeronautics weeds is beyond awesome. Thank you!
Thank you for your content always enjoy watching
This was absolutely interesting as f! Thank you for this. I loved aerospace engineering classes in school, but it is even wilder seeing the math and analysis methods applied in real life.
Thank you for this video. So insightful and cool
Wow! A pleasure listening to this! 🙏
Very cool graph at the end
This guy is great, I cen see his passion and he explains the ideas so well I feel like I understood most of it
Its always an amazing day when Real Engineering uploads. Thank yoh for bestowing such light upon us!
Totally geeked out on this interview.
Art Toy, Lawrence, Michigan, USA.
I needed this interview thank you guys so much 🔥🔥🔥
That's great!
I respect and hope we see many more projects be this willing to be open to the public (to a certain extent of course) but I could see a huge increase in support of these types of cutting edge projects if more stuff like this occurs. I'd love to see a new wave of that era of Retro-Futurism style vibe boom. BTW modern advanced nuclear energy NEEDS to have a major comeback and I wish it happened yesterday
This was an interesting interview. Something that really resonated with me was the fact they use CFD to a point, and wind tunnels to a point. But they go back to the 50's style of pure math to work things out. Then that triggered memories back to dynamics and one of the guys was really punching out the calculus and numerical analysis to understand what he was doing not just doing it. He knew from day one of engineering that he wanted to build rockets. Somehow he knew exactly what he needed to do when the lecturers constantly said "There's a proof for this and you can work it out if you try hard enough but I'll just give you the equation". I feel now, that the lecturers made a mistake. There's knowing and there's understanding. The difference may be subtle but it's Important. It's the difference between knowing your shit and knowing you're shit.
Solid 💯
White paint has also low absorptivity in the spectrum of light, coatings like Enbio used on Solar Orbiter would counter both heat source. At least, that is the goal.
Great video, I enjoyed every bit of it
Great interview. Nice to hear directly from Joe. Very interesting that Joe discussed the exit nozzle drag issue on the SR-71's engine, but not the reverse circulation around the outside of the engine at high Mach #'s that NASA discovered in the 1970's- which resulted in an enormous amount of drag that Lockheed never found the source of. This led to the SR-71 needing much more thrust (fuel burn) at high cruise speed than had been anticipated. This design to in practice difference impacted the SR-71's range enormously. Curious to know if maybe I have my information wrong, and maybe it is this exit nozzle issue that NASA discovered???
i need an enginnering mentor like this guy
I really hope Hermeus is successful. I love the level of transparency and openness as a startup.
Amazing interview, 10 points smarter after watching this.
He is very intelligent yet explained it in a way regular engineers like me can understand.
Out of how many points total?
It was awesome being able to follow along with out being given anything specific.
Also emmisivity is a function of several things including wavelength so something can be close to 1 in the infrared but close to 0 in the visible.
What an absolutely fascinating video!
You've really outdone yourself with this video! Engineering with Hermeus engineers sharing all this goodness!
Thanks for uploading this. It's a fascinating discussion.
Hermeus is seemingly turning into a top tier company
Man, you really can see the advantage of the X-15 "just use a rocket engine" approach... Especially given the fact they still have to be tied to aerospace primes to help provide large parts of the jet engine, whereas the launch startups often just make their own engines totally from scratch. I really honestly think a rocketplane could be decently efficient, too, using a skip-glide approach, probably allowing transatlantic flight.
The benefits from using rockets would not be worth the extra cost from needing to buy/make oxidiser and then carrying that weight increasing fuel use.
Oxidizer is extremely freaking cheap, though. That's a thing a lot of people don't get about rockets: the oxygen is basically free, and the acceleration is high enough that the gravity losses aren't a big deal. When I mean free, I mean like $100, maybe even $50 per *tonne*, compared to like $10,000 per tonne of liquid hydrogen. So even though you need 8 times as much oxygen as hydrogen, the oxygen is basically free.@@ewanlee6337
Respect Hermeus, usually tech startups especially in aeronautics are rare these days.
Just need to poach talent from the competition and pay better. That is literally the playbook.
yeah it's hard these days because boeing lockheed etc are all propped up by the government
The F-8 also had a variable incidence wing that actually flew but of a much simpler design and for improving landing visibility and engine inlet angle wrt the airflow.
So interesting the back to basics near hand calculated fluid dynamics. My mom was an engineer at AVRO and the ARROW interceptor was designed using slide rules, giant hand cranked mechanical calculators, tables and graphs they hand drew, hand drawn blueprints and models shot off rockets over Lake Ontario for some high speed data. The result was IMHO a beautiful bird in its form and some pretty impressive performance.
You have a interesting mom. And it's cool that she got to work on such a project
this has me hyped as hell
Great video. When he was talking about bad zones for climbing, I then understood why in Top Gun Maverick the Darkstar drops altitude when going into Hyersonic transition..... 🙂
I'm glad to see that high tech engineering other than software is making a comeback in the states.
this was a great video, love the whiteboard part at the end.
very inspirational!
The graph part was very cool teaching
The thumbnail was absolutely incredible.
When he started on the white board and my engineering degree go used for the first time in a decade.... took me back to why I got the degree. You the man for these videos
It's great they let you publish it. He didn't release secret information, but gave a very good flight dynamics lecture.
Wow really great thanks real engineering
This was really cool to watch.
Utterly fascinating!😊
Thank you for that video it was really great . It was the same issues we had in my days as an engineering student doing ballistic trajectories and performance. That plane would more suit the longer flights Trans pacific, ny - Japan, Australia, New Zealand. As described time to altitude may make trips western Europe not feasible due cost of fuel for a short flight at those speeds . To me ,we need to have SSTs again it's the 21st century and we have no wow factor in air travel like concorde was , sad .
23:00 I could be wrong, but I think the highly emissive white paints work by being highly emissive in the infrared spectrum, while being highly reflective (i.e. white) in the visible spectrum.
Man I could listen to this shit all day
Amazing!
Wow, that was interesting to watch!
This video is fascinating. I swear I blinked and its almost over
That was fascinating
They are not hiring engineers like they are desperate for talent. Entry level is a bloodbath that took me over 1000 applications to land a job in notice how every position you talked about requires previous experience.
Thank you!
That was awesome
Absolutely Incredible!
Thank you for sharing this
Do you think next Gen. AC will already be considered into space flight regime SpC?
As a retired fighter pilot that lived in the charts I was geeking out.
as someone in their aeronautical engineering masters degree... this was fucking epic
Good luck my friend! Wishing you all the best 😉 And, yes... Yes it was!!
@@resh.. thanks!
Hermes seems like such an awesome company with really cool and smart people. I really hope they are successful and this shows “small” kind of start up companies like this can break into a huge industry and be successful. More competition is better for everyone!
@14:27 Wait, didn’t the F-8 Crusader kind of do this with its variable incident wing? That was pretty cool!
The engineer is top notch